To finish off Alastair's point, the sealift companies have to bring in their own heavy equipment and specialized machinery so they can off-load and load cargo within our community. That also displaces the potential for other goods to come up. The prices we pay for goods in our communities, especially for those that are sealifted in, I would say are much higher because of the extra cost associated with the specialized nature of off-loading, since there are no port facilities for off-loading.
I have a house up on the hill overlooking the bay, and it's really interesting over the summer to watch the goods going onto and coming off the ships and seeing the heavy equipment half-submerged in seawater going out, getting stuff, and bringing it in. It's just a different world, and I don't think many people outside of Nunavut have an appreciation for how expensive it is here, but also how difficult it is to get things in and out of our communities.
As far as language goes, I guess that in the 1960s and 1970s when the education system was established in the territory, there was a greater expectancy for non-Inuit to learn Inuktitut or to function in Inuktitut. There was this base level of understanding between students and teachers that has eroded over the years, so that now there really isn't an expectation that any non-Inuk who comes into any one of the communities will ever learn anything about Inuktitut or Inuit language, which is really too bad. It's a shift in mindset.
As far as the curriculum and the language of instruction go, I suppose there were more Inuit who could become certified as K through grade 3 teachers in the beginning of the education system and that made it possible for the delivery of that curriculum to be in Inuktitut. In addition to that, up until probably the 1980s, there were very few multilingual kindergartners. So if you were dealing with an entire kindergarten population that didn't speak a word of English, then there was some necessity of speaking Inuktitut as the language of instruction.
But by grade 4, there really weren't the curriculum or the teachers available to deliver the curriculum in Inuktitut, so I think that is why it started out that way, and hasn't necessarily gotten any better over time. Residential school happened until the late 1980s in Nunavut. It wasn't until the early 1990s that each community had its own high school.
So if you think of the education system in Nunavut and its evolution, we're still in the very early stages. I would argue, then, that we have a lot more flexibility or openness in regard to alternative models of education that would be more successful.
The final point on federal participation in policy-making and social programs--